
George J. Andreopoulos
Contributor
Professor, Department of Government, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York. Editor of Genocide: Conceptual and Historical Dimensions, Concepts and Strategies in International Human Rights, and others.
Primary Contributions (5)
Extradition, in international law, the process by which one state, upon the request of another, effects the return of a person for trial for a crime punishable by the laws of the requesting state and committed outside the state of refuge. Extraditable persons include those charged with a crime but…
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Publications (2)

Concepts and Strategies in International Human Rights (Teaching Texts in Law and Politics) (November 2002)
Although the celebrations surrounding the fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) highlighted some remarkable achievements in the human rights movement, the international community must remain cognizant of a whole new array of unprecedented challenges. These challenges relate to the relevance of the conceptual framework within which the human rights movement has been operating as well as to the need for effective strategies of promotion and protection.

Genocide: Conceptual and Historical Dimensions (Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights) (February 1997)
The term genocide has been used to describe a wide range of events and polities, from the "final solution of the Jewish question" in Nazi Germany to Western efforts to establish birth control and abortion programs in Third World nations. It is these dimensions of genocide that the authors to this volume explore, in the context both of their historical roots and of the implications for current and future international action.